Daytum [iPhone, WebApp]
january 2011 by jpfinley
Created by Nicholas Feltron and Ryan Case, Daytum for iPhone is complementary application for Daytum web app to track your daily activities. iPhone app allows you to add, edit and view entries to help collect and communicate the most important stats in your world.
Daytum was originally conceived by Ryan Case and Nicholas Felton as an elegant and intuitive tool for counting and communicating personal statistics, inspired by Nicholas Felton’s “Annual Reports” which he has been making since 2005.
The iPhone app adopts the beautiful and familiar cyan and grey palette offering all the features you’d expect for inputting and tracking data on the go. Within the app, the entries page features an entry field and a list of recent entries. Tapping an item name or entry amount will link to their detail views. By swiping across an entry, you can quickly choose to re-add that item and amount at the current time, or choose to edit or delete the entry. The main item and category views are scrollable lists. Tap the button at the top of the page to add a new item or category. Click on an item or category to visit its detailed view, or swipe to quickly reveal edit and delete options. Not only can you add data quickly but also the app allows you to visualise the same data in beautiful graphs. Selecting an item or category from the list view loads the graph view. Dragging the handles below the graph allows for the default 2 week range to be adjusted. Drag over the graph to see the entry total for a specific day. In addition there is favourites view, a place to keep frequently referenced graphs. Save an item or category here by pressing the star icon on a graph. When it’s blue, the graph has been saved to your favourites.
As it can be expected, Nicholas and Ryan have done a wonderful job with the app. Although utilising in a lot of instances standard UIKit elements, there are tweeks and quirky elements that give the app unique feel. Some may miss the minimal feel of the web app, myself included, but the iPhone app seem to make the best of the two worlds. UI is light, fast and functional.
Tracking your data requires discipline and persistence. My only concern with tools such as this has always been that they required 100% commitment which Nicholas is known for (see video below). I would love to see features added to the web app which allows you to pull activities from other sources such as RSS or Flickr, something that Momento does. The actual how this data can be filtered may be related to keywords or hashtags but never the less it would be great way to collect, analyse and reflect upon your activities. For the time being, Daytum relies much on your persistance to be able to reach a point and enought data is collected. With the knowledge that API is on it’s way we can rest assured that most of the things I just mentioned are on the way. iPhone app is just the first step in that direction, using oAuth and undocumented and currently private API.
To summarise, Daytum is a fantastic way to collect and track important stats. iPhone app is a wonderfully made and designed iPhone app to complement Daytum service. Considering it’s free, including the web service which is also free, limited to 1000 entries giving you enough reason to try it. Should you feel this is something you’d like to continue using, a tiny fee of $4 a month should be no deterrent whatsoever.
Platform: iPhone
Version: 1.0
Cost: Free
Developer: Daytum
See also your.flowingdata [WebApp]
Daytum [iPhone, WebApp] is a post from: CreativeApplications.Net | Follow us on Twitter - Facebook - Flickr - Vimeo
Related Posts:
It’s About Time – Volume 2 [iPhone, iPad]It’s About Time – Volume 1 [iPhone]Pachube [WebApp, iPhone, Android]Íonz / Digital Persona [WebApp, Flash]your.flowingdata [WebApp]Impure [WebApp]
WebApp
iPhone
calendar
data
feltron
graph
stats
track
visualization
from google
Daytum was originally conceived by Ryan Case and Nicholas Felton as an elegant and intuitive tool for counting and communicating personal statistics, inspired by Nicholas Felton’s “Annual Reports” which he has been making since 2005.
The iPhone app adopts the beautiful and familiar cyan and grey palette offering all the features you’d expect for inputting and tracking data on the go. Within the app, the entries page features an entry field and a list of recent entries. Tapping an item name or entry amount will link to their detail views. By swiping across an entry, you can quickly choose to re-add that item and amount at the current time, or choose to edit or delete the entry. The main item and category views are scrollable lists. Tap the button at the top of the page to add a new item or category. Click on an item or category to visit its detailed view, or swipe to quickly reveal edit and delete options. Not only can you add data quickly but also the app allows you to visualise the same data in beautiful graphs. Selecting an item or category from the list view loads the graph view. Dragging the handles below the graph allows for the default 2 week range to be adjusted. Drag over the graph to see the entry total for a specific day. In addition there is favourites view, a place to keep frequently referenced graphs. Save an item or category here by pressing the star icon on a graph. When it’s blue, the graph has been saved to your favourites.
As it can be expected, Nicholas and Ryan have done a wonderful job with the app. Although utilising in a lot of instances standard UIKit elements, there are tweeks and quirky elements that give the app unique feel. Some may miss the minimal feel of the web app, myself included, but the iPhone app seem to make the best of the two worlds. UI is light, fast and functional.
Tracking your data requires discipline and persistence. My only concern with tools such as this has always been that they required 100% commitment which Nicholas is known for (see video below). I would love to see features added to the web app which allows you to pull activities from other sources such as RSS or Flickr, something that Momento does. The actual how this data can be filtered may be related to keywords or hashtags but never the less it would be great way to collect, analyse and reflect upon your activities. For the time being, Daytum relies much on your persistance to be able to reach a point and enought data is collected. With the knowledge that API is on it’s way we can rest assured that most of the things I just mentioned are on the way. iPhone app is just the first step in that direction, using oAuth and undocumented and currently private API.
To summarise, Daytum is a fantastic way to collect and track important stats. iPhone app is a wonderfully made and designed iPhone app to complement Daytum service. Considering it’s free, including the web service which is also free, limited to 1000 entries giving you enough reason to try it. Should you feel this is something you’d like to continue using, a tiny fee of $4 a month should be no deterrent whatsoever.
Platform: iPhone
Version: 1.0
Cost: Free
Developer: Daytum
See also your.flowingdata [WebApp]
Daytum [iPhone, WebApp] is a post from: CreativeApplications.Net | Follow us on Twitter - Facebook - Flickr - Vimeo
Related Posts:
It’s About Time – Volume 2 [iPhone, iPad]It’s About Time – Volume 1 [iPhone]Pachube [WebApp, iPhone, Android]Íonz / Digital Persona [WebApp, Flash]your.flowingdata [WebApp]Impure [WebApp]
january 2011 by jpfinley
2010 Studio On Fire Letterpress Calendar
january 2010 by jpfinley
The Studio On Fire 2010 Calendar is now available on our new web site. This calendar is a decade marker for us. Established the end of 1999, Studio On Fire began letterpress printing in a cold Minnesota basement. Our first press occupied a spot between the boiler and the litter box, and oh, how the studio has since grown. Now seven presses strong with a fully equipped studio space, we celebrate ten years as a bustling design and print studio.
This Tenfold Edition calendar is letterpress printed with four colors on a cotton-blend stock, each month beautifully illustrated by selected designers the world over.
Contributors:
Jan/Jul_ Studio On Fire
Feb/Aug_Cecilie Ellefsen
Mar/Sept_ Brian Gunderson
Apr/Oct_ The Little Friends of Printmaking
May/Nov_ ghostpatrol
Jun/Dec_ Rilla Alexander (Rinzen)
Design
Letterpress
News
Studio_On_Fire_Products
2010
Brian_Gunderson
brown
calendar
day-glo
easel_stand
edition
florescent
ghostpatrol
green
illustration
little_friends_of_printmaking
months
pink
poptone
printing
rinzen
studio_on_fire
tenfold
from google
This Tenfold Edition calendar is letterpress printed with four colors on a cotton-blend stock, each month beautifully illustrated by selected designers the world over.
Contributors:
Jan/Jul_ Studio On Fire
Feb/Aug_Cecilie Ellefsen
Mar/Sept_ Brian Gunderson
Apr/Oct_ The Little Friends of Printmaking
May/Nov_ ghostpatrol
Jun/Dec_ Rilla Alexander (Rinzen)
january 2010 by jpfinley
New in Calendar: Sports schedules and contacts' birthdays
september 2009 by jpfinley
Posted by Ian Whitfield, Software Engineering InternPeople keep track of lots of things in their Google Calendars — meetings, business trips, due dates and conference calls. But when I started my summer internship at Google, I wondered why it wasn't easier to add calendar events for the fun stuff in life, like birthdays and sports schedules.Now, when you look under "Other Calendars," click "Add," then "Browse Interesting Calendars" (or use this link to the Calendar directory), you'll find calendars for hundreds of teams in dozens of sports leagues — everything from the National Football League to the Korean FA Cup.When you subscribe to your favorite team's calendar, you'll see every game listed, updated in real time with the score as the game progresses.You can also subscribe to a "Contacts' Birthdays and Events" calendar, which will add all of your contacts' birthdays to Google Calendar. Data is pulled from your Gmail contacts and your friends' Google profiles.Finally, we also have two new Calendar Labs features for you to check out: "Dim future repeating events" makes recurring meetings more transparent over time, helping more important meetings pop out, and "Add any gadget by URL" gives you the flexibility put any gadget you'd like in your calendar.
Google_Apps_Blog
calendar
from google
september 2009 by jpfinley
calendardateselect - Google Code
august 2007 by jpfinley
Calendar Widget
calendar
javascript
rubyonrails
rails
ajax
august 2007 by jpfinley
Main Page - GNUTU
january 2006 by jpfinley
GNUTU (Student's Schedule) is designed for students from primary and secondary schools - using it, you can note various information (like marks, tests' dates and important school events).
pim
school
schedule
calendar
linux
gnome
software
january 2006 by jpfinley
related tags
ajax ⊕ Brian_Gunderson ⊕ brown ⊕ calendar ⊖ data ⊕ day-glo ⊕ Design ⊕ easel_stand ⊕ edition ⊕ feltron ⊕ florescent ⊕ ghostpatrol ⊕ gnome ⊕ Google_Apps_Blog ⊕ graph ⊕ green ⊕ illustration ⊕ iPhone ⊕ javascript ⊕ Letterpress ⊕ linux ⊕ little_friends_of_printmaking ⊕ months ⊕ News ⊕ pim ⊕ pink ⊕ poptone ⊕ printing ⊕ rails ⊕ rinzen ⊕ rubyonrails ⊕ schedule ⊕ school ⊕ software ⊕ stats ⊕ studio_on_fire ⊕ Studio_On_Fire_Products ⊕ tenfold ⊕ track ⊕ visualization ⊕ WebApp ⊕Copy this bookmark: